“Doctrine is heaven; life is earth. In life there is sin, error, uncleanness, and misery mixed, as the saying goes ‘with vinegar.’ Here love should condone, tolerate, be deceived, trust, hope, and endure all things (I Cor. 13:7): here forgiveness of sins should have complete sway, providing that sin and error are not defended. But just as there is no error in doctrine, so there is no need for any forgiveness of sins. Therefore there is no comparison at all between doctrine and life. ‘One dot’ of doctrine is worth more than ‘heaven and earth’ (Matt. 5:18); therefore we do not permit the slightest offense against it. But we can be lenient toward errors of life. For we, too, err daily in our life and conduct; so do all the saints, as they earnestly confess in the Lord’s Prayer and the Creed. But by the grace of God our doctrine is pure; we have the articles of faith solidly established in the Sacred Scripture. The devil would dearly love to corrupt and overthrow these; that is why he attacks us so cleverly with this specious argument about not offending against love and the harmony among the churches.”
H/T: Professor John T. Pless
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